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Lazy French Fries in Beef Tallow or Coconut Oil Recipe

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I’ve got a touch of obsessive-compulsive disorder at times. For example: as a child, every week during the 45-minute drive on the way back from dance class , I would consume a small order of McDonald’s French fries. (That’s not the OCD yet.) It took nearly the entire time because I’d eat them like this: a small bite toward the left side of my mouth from one end of the fry, flip it around, and a small bite toward the right side of my mouth from the other end. The average fry took about three rounds of the pattern before it was gone.

I know, I know…I’m totally weird. And now that I’ve bared my soul and shared my deep-seated quirk with the world, please don’t run and hide. Rest assured that I don’t do that anymore – the McDonald’s part OR the OCD part (mommies don’t have the luxury of 45 minutes to eat French fries anyway, right?)

I’m not really old enough to remember when McDonald’s made their big fry oil switch, but now that I’ve tasted French fries made in the “old way”, I can only imagine that it made a huge difference: “Before switching to pure vegetable oil in 1990, the McDonald’s corporation cooked its french fries in a mixture of 93% beef tallow and 7% cottonseed oil.” (Source)

McD’s made the switch because of pressure to get away from saturated fats, which we know received a bad rep as artery-clogging nasties…so of course they moved to trans fats, later proven to be the worst possible unhealthy, unnatural fat one could put into their body! I’m voting they move back to beef tallow…

Lazy Katie Experiments with Deep Frying

I’ve seen some great recipes for French fries around the blogosphere lately, but I’m a pretty lazy girl sometimes. I read at 11th Heaven’s Homemaking Haven about Jen’s teenage son making potato chips on a whim one day, both baked and fried. Inspired by his impulsivity, I figured I might be able to fly by the seat of my pants later that week. Without a recipe, I just tried making potato chips by slicing potatoes really thin, heating about a half inch of coconut oil in my cast iron skillet, and cooking them until they looked like potato chips. Some recipe, eh?

I did the same for French fries. I didn’t use a thermometer or a timer. I certainly didn’t have as much fat as I was probably supposed to have. I just did it, and then I drooled…They were really, really good.

If you use my “recipe” be sure not to overheat the oil. Never to smoking. I didn’t really go above “medium” on my power burner.

A Few Recipe Tweaks: Beef Tallow French Fries

When I read at Cheeseslave’s post that yes, the fat from the top of my beef stock WAS, in fact, tallow, I decided to swallow my ill-conceived notions of “evil beef fat” and try French fries in it. I only had enough for one pan full, and not very deep at that (less than an inch). The potatoes aren’t even fully submerged:

My french fry picture was inadvertently downsized – but you can see better with the chips.

I just flipped them one time. When they looked done, I pulled them out to drain on paper towel and salted them:

Cheeseslave also taught me how to get crispier fries: soak the potato sticks in water either for 12 hours (in the fridge) or boil for a few minutes. (See her technical recipe for beef tallow french fries, too.)

My fries were good either way, but AMAZING, like, CANNOT stop eating them amazing, would pay $10 at a fab restaurant for them amazing, with the soaking and the tallow. I haven’t enjoyed a meal at home so thoroughly before or since, believe me. If you have a weak spot for French fries, you must put “beef tallow fries” on your mental “to try someday” recipe list!Yum When I told my friends I made homemade potato chips and French fries, their jaws dropped because I assured them they were deep-fried, not baked, and loaded with real salt. They know I cook “healthy food” and certainly weren’t expecting such an “indulgence” from my kitchen! My perspective on healthy food has become set apart from that of our culture.

I couldn’t get enough of these fries, and the best part is that, if you get over the starchy shouldn’t-really-eat-that aspect of the potatoes themselves, there’s no guilt about eating French fries! I feel totally comfortable serving potato chips and French fries to my kids when I make them myself in healthy fats. The kids are really happy too!

The problem is when we encounter “regular” chips and French fries and Lovey Girl knows what they are and what she’s missing out on!!

One Important Consideration

Kelly’s site says to dry them thoroughly. This is probably for safety (boiling oil and water = not such a good combination!). I didn’t know that. Don’t take my word on it, but at whatever temperature my tallow was, I didn’t have any exploding grease. I drained the potatoes and took them right from the pot into the oil. My tallow was *not* boiling or bubbling.

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We’re winding down on the Fat Full Fall. Next week I’ll share a “baseline fats” post, to break down how and for what purpose you can use each type of fat.

About Katie Kimball @ Kitchen Stewardship

I’m a Catholic wife and mother of four who wants the best of nutrition and living for her family. I believe that God calls us to be good stewards of all His gifts as we work to feed our families: time, finances, the good green earth, and of course, our healthy bodies. I'm the founder and boss lady here at Kitchen Stewardship -- welcome aboard!

20 Bites of Conversation So Far

I will have to try this because I’m a french fry lover too! First I will have to get some tallow. Is tallow also the fat that you get when you fry ground beef? Sorry for the ignorance 🙂 .-= Greta @ Mom Living Healthy´s last blog ..Fitness Plan Friday: Raking Leaves and Burning Calories =-.

No apologies allowed; I’m just BARELY qualified to answer that question. Tonya’s comment about the back fat makes me wonder if tallow has to be specific, but in my limited knowledge, I would say yes – you should be able to save the ground beef drippings as tallow. I did it with my soup scrapings! 🙂 Katie

I LOVE french fries, they are my weakness. I don’t make them at home because if I did then I would want to more often than I should 🙂 I made them once and they were super. Experimenting with all of this is hardly lazy!!!!! .-= Live.Love.Eat´s last blog ..Slow Down & Savour…. =-.

Here’s another use for the coconut oil – use it to make old fashioned movie theater popcorn. Yep, they used to use coconut oil long before they started using the cheap imitation butter flavored stuff. I make huge batches to bring to church for snack every now and then, and everyone devours it (sprinkled only with super fine popcorn salt while it’s still warm).

Also, I didn’t read all your links, but most chefs agree the best way to cook your fries is to first cook them in 350 oil (just until they get a tiny bit crispy on the edges). Then remove them from the oil, cool them, raise the oil temp to 375 and cook them again until they are golden brown. Just thought I’d pass that along to you.

My hubby doesn’t eat red meat so there won’t be any beef tallow here but I’ve read about it – don’t know enough about it to have an opinion. I am not a lover of fried foods – I think it comes from my days of being really fat. And, I haven’t eaten them for so long that if I do it upsets my stomach. I do think it’s great, though, that you’ve found a healthier way to enjoy fries!

I am older than ButterYum and I do remember when they made the switch…they’ve never been the same. Also, her tip about frying twice is one I use, AFTER I soak them in cold water for 2 hours. It does give you a crispy on the outside and perfect on the inside fry. .-= Erin´s last blog ..30 Day Shred Challenge – Day 2 =-.

1) Choose an Idaho Russet potato. Russet Burbanks if you can get them.

2) Condition the potato by storing in a 70 degree environment for a couple of weeks (potatoes coming out of cold storage need time to convert sugars back to starch).

3) Cut the potatoes into the desired fry size, like the fast food places do.

4) Soak the cut potato strips in room temperature water for at least 8 hours, overnight is good (this soaking plumps up the cells within the potatoes to result in an improved texture). DO NOT USE ICE WATER OR REFRIGERATE!

5) Dry the potato strips and fry in 300 degree oil until just cooked inside and limp, fry time is dependent on the thickness of the fry strip. Let cool.

6) Bring oil to 375 degrees and fry until golden brown and crispy.

7) Of course, use beef fat, properly twice fried fries will not soak up fat. What’s the point of endeavoring to produce the very best french fry and then compromising the taste with a neutral tasting fry oil.

8) Important, work in controlled sized batches that doesn’t drop the frying temperature significantly. Maintain the fry temp or the fries will absorb fat.

9) Rice Bran Oil is the best alternative to those that have a aversion to beef fat. In & Out restaurants are noted for excellent fries, they fry in Rice Bran Oil.

Ok, I made these last week (in coconut oil) and they were TO DIE FOR! Question is – can I re-use the oil and do it again? I poured it off into a jar and it’s been sitting on my counter waiting for me to ask the question. LOL

One thought on draining your fried goodies: Instead of draining on a paper towel, to save that precious (expensive!) fat, drain your fried goods on a cookie cooling rack over a glass plate. Pour the oil from the plate back in the pan instead of adding more oil.

Please remember that I’m just a gal who reads a lot and spends way too much time in her kitchen. I’m not a doctor, nurse, scientist, or even a real chef, and certainly the FDA hasn't evaluated anything on this blog. Any products mentioned are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Please talk to your health professional (or at least your spouse) before doing anything you might think is questionable. Trust your own judgment…I can’t be liable for problems that occur from bad decisions you make based on content found here.

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